Compiled, selectively annotated and edited by Frank Joseph Shulman, this comprehensive bibliography and research guide is based upon the sixpage “Bibliography of the Writings of David N. Keightley” that appeared… Click to show full abstract
Compiled, selectively annotated and edited by Frank Joseph Shulman, this comprehensive bibliography and research guide is based upon the sixpage “Bibliography of the Writings of David N. Keightley” that appeared in David N. Keightley, These Bones Shall Rise Again: Selected Writings on Early China (edited and with an introduction by Henry Rosemont Jr. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 2014). In its present, significantly expanded and updated version, it is designed as a classified as well as chronologically organized record and guide that can enable its users to have a better idea not only of Keightley’s many contributions to our current knowledge about early China through his research and writings but also of the evolution – the trajectory – of his scholarship between the 1960s and the early 2010s. It frequently indicates, for example, the relationship between a conference paper or a guest lecture that he delivered and a journal article/chapter in an edited volume that he subsequently published. The tables of contents or their counterparts are provided for Keightley’s English-language monographs, for many of his articles and book chapters, and for his doctoral dissertation and B.A. thesis; brief descriptive annotations appear within a substantial number of the entries; and translations are included for nearly all non-English language titles. While this work has sought to be as comprehensive as possible in its bibliographical coverage of printed publications, published and unpublished conference papers, and the scholarly reviews of his books, with a few exceptions their existence in electronic format is not explicitly indicated. Wen-Yi Huang (Ph.D. candidate in Chinese history, Department of History and Classical Studies, McGill University, Montreal, Canada) participated in various stages of the preparation of this work, and she assisted especially in the editing of the information that appears for Chinese-language publications. The other particularly notable contributors were the members of the staff of Resource Sharing & Reserves at the University of Maryland at College Park Libraries, who
               
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